Why didn't I ever get a gin party date? That's one event I wouldn't miss. And since it is NOT host by Argentinian, I can actually get there on time and find PEOPLE there.
Me neither
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Why didn't I ever get a gin party date? That's one event I wouldn't miss. And since it is NOT host by Argentinian, I can actually get there on time and find PEOPLE there.
Me neither
After a bit of digging around, I now know that The Herald is owned by the Indalo group which is owned by Cristobel Lopez, a known 'friend' of the hard Kirchner left. He was sent to prison around 2016 for AR$8bn tax evasion.
Quote
The prosecutor's office asked to revoke the acquittal of businessmen Cristóbal López and Fabián de Sousa and sentence them to four years and four months in prison in the case in which they were tried for not paying fuel tax on their company Oil. He also demanded that both pay $5166 million to repair the damage and linked this preferential treatment that the businessmen received from the AFIP with the payments they made to the Kirchner family for rentals of their properties, which is being investigated in the Hotesur and Los Sauces cases.
This quote is from June this year.
Indalo also owns C5N and numerous other pro-K media companies, so now we know which side of the fence The Herald sits on.
C5N used to be a decent news channel - now its so biaseed that it makes Cronic tV look a serious contender for a Pulitzer prize.
Powermongers love to own media (and social media) companies for their propaganda. Rupert Murdoch and Elon Musk are not alone.
Independent media? Are there any truly independent TV Channels or independent newspapers in the world?
Quote from The Herald on Facebook:
QuoteAs a candidate, Javier Milei undermined the country’s democratic consensus. As president, he seems intent on stretching democracy to its limits.
Since the inauguration, Argentine society has been subjected to a series of institutional bombardments — the economic chainsaw plan announced via a botched video, the draconian anti-protest protocol, the unprecedented sweeping mega-decree, and finally, a gargantuan so-called “omnibus bill,” which attempts to indirectly change the Constitution.
This aggressive oversaturation from all sides feels like a purposeful maneuver, with the harrowing promise that more is on the way.
My reply:
The Herald, as usual, seems to conveniently forget that the country needs rebuilding from the top down, which is exactly what Milei is doing. Or would The Herald have preferred living the lie that Argentina has been living for almost 20 years? That's right, Argentina has been living in the land of pixies, but now reality has come around and it's time to pay the bill.
Source:
Did the BA Herald criticize the previous administrations? And have protests themselves, in fact, been criminalized, or is it just the case that criminal behavior during the protests is being prosecuted?
BA Herald = CFK Lovers
That says a lot.
On March 5th, Sabrina Bolke was threatened, sexually assaulted and tied up by unknown assailants in her home, at least according to The Herald.
She is an activist for HIJOS, a non-profit founded by children of the dictatorship's victims and this article very slyly goes on to revisit Milei's questioning of the 30,000 disappeared, framing the entire piece as if the two attackers were paid Libertad supporters, not directly, but the insinuation is there clear as daylight.
Tell me if I'm wrong.
Edit
This narrative is also being pushed by El Destape, a known adversary of Macri and those who do not support Kirchnerism:
Quote
The two companies and Navarro himself received large amounts of money in official advertising (over $17 million between 2009 and 2015) during Cristina Fernández’s administration. In contrast, Navarro has not received any official advertising during Mauricio Macri’s administration.